Posts Tagged ‘loans’

No Fax Payday Loans Becoming More Accessible

GAINESVILLE, FL, June 21, 2009 /24-7PressRelease/ — In such hard economic times as these, many homeowners and families who are forced to rent are in desperate need of financial help. While television money gurus and professionals steer people away from them, no fax payday loans may end up being the difference between a home being foreclosed and the payment being made on time.

“You can’t just expect people who have been making payments on a home for 10 to 15 years to just give up on it because times are bad,” says George Archer, Public Relations Manager for JTVCashadvance.com. “They were unexpectedly cut from a job they’ve been at for 20 years or they’ve suddenly found themselves on a fixed income… when none of your family and friends have extra money to lend and when the banks won’t touch you, who else is going to take the risk?”

Archer may be right. As home foreclosures continue to be at record highs in the United States and 1.6 million vehicles were repossessed in 2008, many are finding themselves stuck between getting a payday loan or losing their only vehicle, their only place to live, or worse, simply being able to eat.

“I don’t think these politicians in Washington lobbying against the payday loan industry understand what’s going on down here…” says Robin of New Johnsonville, TN. “When everyone you know is scraping by as barely as you are, what are you supposed to do when the only car you have will be repoed next week? Lose car, lose job. They can’t relate to that kind of desperation.”

Even borrowers with good credit are having a hard time making end’s meet and have found themselves resorting to cash advances to pull through this tough time. They also tend to find themselves embarassed, believing that only those who have overextended themselves have to resort to a payday loan store, but they couldn’t be more wrong.

“The money you need is available through our program, which has a higher approval rate than others,” says Archer. “We make sure your information gets to the correct lender; if you only have a savings account, your application will be submitted to a lender who offers loans for those with only savings accounts. We try to make sure that you get the quickest approval possible.”

No Fax Payday Loans JTVcashadvance is a leading website in the no fax payday loans field and you can visit their website at http://www.jtvcashadvance.com .

Wisconsin payday lenders targeted

A 2009 legislative battle royal is shaping up in Wisconsin, one of the last states without an interest rate limit that payday and title loan lenders can charge to their high-risk borrowers.

On May 28, state Rep. Gordon Hintz, D-Oshkosh, re-introduced essentially the same bill that died without floor votes during the 2007 and 2008 legislative sessions. The fate of those bills is testament to the political muscle of payday lenders in Madison.

The industry has exploded in Wisconsin over the past decade to more than 500 registered payday lending outlets around the state, from just 64 in 1996. There are seven payday and title loan stores in Superior, 12 in Oshkosh. Wisconsin has been fertile ground for payday lenders because it is among two dozen states where lenders making short-term loans of less than $5,000 are virtually unregulated. In Wisconsin, these so-called “licensed lenders” — variously operating as payday, car title, check advance, check cashing and cash advance stores — need only register with the banking division of the state Department of Financial Institutions, and pay a $500 annual fee to do business.

Typically, a payday lender provides an advanced loan to be repaid within a short-term period, generally two weeks. The usual fee in Wisconsin for a two-week loan is about $20 per $100 borrowed, which amounts to an annualized percentage rate (APR) of 525 percent. If the borrower can’t repay, the lender “rolls over” the loan with additional fees tacked on with each extension. A stark example: A $200 loan refinanced four times leaves the Wisconsin borrower owing $200 in additional fees in just 10 weeks, creating what critics of payday lending call the “debt trap.”

Those critics, both Democrats and Republicans, say the industry’s meteoric growth in Wisconsin has evaded regulatory oversight for a single reason: its political contributions to key legislative leaders. Wisconsin Democracy Campaign has tracked those political contributions and lobbying activity of payday lenders since 1999.

Executive director Mike McCabe said all of the major payday lending chains operating in Wisconsin are based outside the state, among them, Check Into Cash, Tennessee; Advance America, South Carolina; Check ‘n Go, Virginia; and Payday Loan Stores, Chicago.

During the period 1999-2008, the payday lending industry was the No. 4 out-of-state individual contributor group to legislative and statewide office candidates, according to Democracy Campaign (see chart below).

“It has been a significant source of money, and they give it to both Democrats and Republicans. They hedge their bets. It’s a bipartisan problem,” McCabe said.

The Democracy Campaign’s research shows about 40 percent of that money has found its way to Assembly Republicans, reflecting the party’s control of the lower body until Democrats won a majority in the November general election and took over in January.

Contributions to the Senate were evenly split, reflecting shared control of the upper chamber during the period. A major chunk of that money is contributed to party campaign committees controlled by leaders, who assign bills to committees.

Hintz introduced his 2008 bill in the second year of his first two-year term in the Assembly. In an interview, he said he knew his 2008 bill was doomed when Republican Assembly leaders in control assigned it to the financial institutions committee, another favorite industry target for its contributions.

Hintz is asking Democratic leadership that now controls the Assembly to assign his 2009 bill to the consumer protection committee he chairs. With thousands of Wisconsin families trying to hold on in an economy wracked by layoffs and foreclosures, predatory lending should have higher priority than during the earlier failed attempts to regulate the industry, he said. “This is our No. 1 consumer protection issue,” he said.

Hintz expects the Assembly to turn its attention to his bill after the two-year state budget for the biennium beginning July 1 is enacted. “This is the right thing to do, and I’ll be disappointed if we don’t have a bill for the governor to sign by the end of the year,” he said.

Gov. James Doyle, a Democrat, vetoed a watered-down, industry-backed measure in 2004 limited to consumer education. Doyle urged legislators then to return with a bill that capped interest rates. “He said ‘let’s do it right’ and this is that bill,” Hintz said.

His bill would prohibit payday lenders from charging more than 36 percent per year, and toughen penalties for violations. Current law limits punishment for operating without a license to no more than a $500 fine and/or a six-month jail sentence. Hintz proposes to allow a borrower to also sue a lender that charges more than 36 percent for damages equal to twice the finance charge, or for incidental or consequential costs to the borrower, whichever is greater.

In 2006, Congress imposed the 36 percent interest rate cap for active duty military borrowers.

The new bill Hintz has introduced already has attracted 36 Assembly co-sponsors, including Reps. Nick Milroy, D-Superior, Gary Sherman, D-Port Wing, Mary Huebler, D-Rice Lake, and Majority Leader Tom Nelson, D-Kaukauna. Nelson, the Democrats’ No. 2 leader in the Assembly, authored the failed 2007 bill, and is in a strategic position to steer it through the 2009 legislative process.

No companion bill has been introduced in the state Senate, but at least eight of that body’s 33 members — including Sen. Robert Jauch, D-Poplar — have indicated they will support a payday loan bill with the 36 percent annual rate cap, Hintz said.

Nevertheless, legislators present and past have no illusions about the uphill fight ahead. Hintz wouldn’t name names, but said 18 industry-paid lobbyists already are working the Legislature to block his bill. “That’s the most I’ve seen on any issue I can think of,” he said.

Among those lobbyists are Superior native William “Bill” McCoshen, former commerce secretary for Gov. Tommy Thompson; and Shawn Pfaff, a former Doyle staffer, according to the Wisconsin Ethics Board Web site, http://ethics.state.wi.us.

Rep. Frank Boyle, D-Superior, who retired last year after 11 terms in the Assembly, was a co-sponsor for Rep. Nelson’s Assembly Bill 211 that was bottled up in the 2007 session. “It was the most political influence peddled since the Brewers (Miller) stadium bill, one of the most disgusting things I saw,” Boyle said. “Leadership in both parties (colluded) and the bill never saw the light of day.”

Given the changed economic landscape since then, Hintz has drawn a clear line in the sand with his 2009 proposal that will force leadership in both parties to choose between money and what is right, Boyle said. “It’s going to be one helluva fight,” he said. “My money is with the money.”

Another payday lending critic is Superior Mayor David Ross, who has led a local effort to curb payday lending using restrictive zoning. As a result, the number of payday outlets in the city has dropped from eight to seven, he said.

Ross, a Republican exploring candidacy for lieutenant governor in 2010, resorted to the zoning tactic after pressing legislators in both parties in 2007 to cap interest rates and limit the allowable number of payday loan “rollovers.” He watched in disgust as Republican and Democratic leaders buried Nelson’s 2007 bill in committee.

“It was laughable. There’s a role for government to protect against predatory practices, but most of what I’ve seen so far has been hypocrisy…lip service even to the point of sponsoring bills they know won’t pass, while taking massive amounts of money from the industry,” he said.

Ross spares Nelson from that criticism, calling the new Assembly majority leader a thoughtful, forceful advocate for protecting victims of predatory lending. In his new role, Nelson will have considerable influence over whether the Hintz bill becomes law, and Ross will be watching for the bill’s committee assignment. “This will be the (first) test,” he said.

Override payday lending veto

Gov. Mark Sanford should have signed a bill that would have imposed some minor restrictions on payday lenders in South Carolina. Instead, it’s up to the Legislature to override Sanford’s veto of modest controls on an industry that sometimes preys upon South Carolinians who are living on the margins.
In fact, this bill does not go far enough. Previous attempts to regulate this industry were preferable, but all of them have failed. So this bill probably is about as good as it’s going to get in terms of payday lending restrictions in South Carolina.

Already, most states and the federal government have regulated this industry. Some states, including Georgia and North Carolina, have banned the practice. It’s past time for South Carolina to put the reins on payday lending, as well. The Legislature should override Sanford’s veto of these minimal regulations.

Payday lenders offer short-term loans, typically for $300 or less. The lenders charge fees equal to annual rates that in some cases exceed 700 percent. Some of these lenders prey on people who are out of options, and the loans can create a cycle of debt that ends in financial ruin.

The lenders say they offer a service that’s in demand. Yet, although there’s no doubt people use payday lenders, there’s also room for reasonable regulation of this industry.

Sanford was wrong when he wrote in his veto message that payday lending is not “ripe for government regulation and control at the level put forth in his bill.” Limiting payday lending, he wrote, will force consumers to seek out less regulated or even illegal forms of borrowing.

The regulations this bill would place on payday lending would not force the lenders out of business — it simply would ensure the loans aren’t being used in a way that perpetuates a cycle of mounting debt that can cause financial catastrophe.

Under this bill, loans would be limited to $550; consumers would be prohibited from having more than one payday loan outstanding at any given time; a one-day waiting period would be established between loans for the first eight loans, with a two-day waiting period on any loans beyond that; a statewide database would be created to track who is eligible for payday loans.

Such rules certainly will not ruin the payday lending industry.

The proposed limit far exceeds that in previous attempts at regulation, and is above the industry-wide average for payday loans. It makes sense to prevent people from having more than one loan at a time — by definition these loans are small, short-term loans designed for emergencies. The waiting period is essential because it would prevent consumers from repaying a payday loan by taking out another payday loan, an action that creates the cycle of debt that worries many industry opponents and consumer advocates.

Sanford has, to a fault at times, been a rock when it comes to his principled stands against government regulation. This is one of those times. However, the Legislature has the power to override this veto, and it should do that. It should also remember that this bill leaves room for even stricter regulations in the future if these rules prove ineffective.

Group takes aim at payday loans in Wyoming

The number of payday lending businesses in Wyoming has more than doubled and the amount of money lent by those businesses has more than tripled since 2000, according to a children’s advocacy organization that supports legislation to rein in the industry.

Payday loans trap families in cycles of debt and ever-deepening poverty, representatives of the Cheyenne-based Wyoming Children’s Action Alliance said Thursday.

“Rather than providing them with the kind of loan that helps them get back on their feet, it sort of sucks them into a debt trap,” the alliance’s Marc Homer said.

A representative of the industry said banks and credit unions can’t provide very small loans and growing numbers payday loan shops only reflect growing demand by consumers for short-term credit.

The alliance announced that it is supporting pending federal legislation that would cap all consumer loans including payday loans at a 36 percent annual percentage rate.

Payday loans are effectively advances on a borrower’s next paycheck. The borrower pays a fee and writes a postdated check that the company agrees not to cash until the customer’s next payday.

People get into trouble when they fail to pay off payday loans promptly. When that happens, the fees add up - effectively becoming astronomically high interest rates.

In Wyoming, the fees work out to an average annual rate of 521 percent, according to Homer.

Payday loans targeted by stiffer legislation

People who depend on a short term loan to get through to another payday could see their money pool drying up if Congress passes a new bill.

The bill, HR 1214 sponsored by Rep. Luis Gutierrez, (D-Ill) Chairman of the Subcommittee on Financial Institutions, puts a cap on what payday loan institutions can charge for a loan.

“The status quo of the payday lending industry is unacceptable and the bill provides a federal safety net for the working poor,” Gutierrez said.

Almost all local payday loan offices are corporate-owned. Inquiries were referred to a corporate spokesperson.

Check n Go company spokesperson Jeffery Kursman said the legislation goes too far and infringes on consumer choice.

“For a lot of people living from paycheck to paycheck the payday loan is their only salvation for unexpected costs, such as car repairs, or other unforeseen expenses,” Kursman said.

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